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Hierarchy and Human Exploitation of the Environment: An Anarchist View Nicholas Rodda, University of Georgia

Hierarchy and Human Exploitation of the Environment: An Anarchist View Nicholas Rodda, University of Georgia

Human attitudes towards the environment are largely shaped by their interactions with other humans. This is due to the subtle changes in the societal structure of original human societies, called organic societies, towards a hierarchical society. Organic human societies were largely egalitarian, which then they applied to their environment. But as organic societies began the shift to a hierarchical system, humans applied their human hierarchical beliefs onto animal and plant interactions, where it is not naturally/coherently applicable. This allowed human societies to justify their domination of the environment, something that did not exist in organic societies, which is leading to the current environmental crises we are facing. This 'anarchist' analysis of hierarchies and the environment, which existed in the earliest anarchists but was refined by Bookchin, goes against the idea that increased technological development leads to increased environmental exploitation.

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Many of the earliest theorists who called themselves anarchist had distinctly ecological tendencies to their writings. This is no surprise considering that many of the earliest anarchists, before entering politics, were involved in some way with the study of life. Kropotkin participated in many geographical expeditions to Siberia, while also attempting to find proofs of Darwin’s theory of evolution in the Siberian tundra (Marshall 309). Malatesta went to school to study medicine, and many of Reclus’s earliest published works were those of geography, not political science (Marshall 339). This contrasts with many Marxist theorists, such as Marx, Engels, and Lenin, who practiced economics, philosophy, and political science as their fields of study. As such, many of their works have the mark of nature written plainly on them. I talk of this because the hierarchical structure that anarchists wish to fight against is the same hierarchical structure that causes the modern mass destruction of the environment. Humanity has existed in a vast array of different social, political, and economic institutions from preliterate, tribal, feudal, all the way to capitalistic societies. All of these have drastically shaped human outlook towards the environment. The formation of hierarchy that is necessary to the development of these complex institutions gives rise to the domination that humanity applies to nature. Humans dominate humans, leading to the domination of nature to satisfy the needs and wants of those of the higher social classes. From here on, I wish to describe how these hierarchical institutions came to be, and how human domination of humans was outsourced into human domination of nature.

Firstly, I wish to debunk the idea that observable hierarchies are present in animal societies and therefore are natural and should be present in human societies. To do this, we must first understand what a hierarchy is in order to reveal why it cannot be accurately applied to animals. Hierarchy, at its simplest, is the relationship of power between roles in a society. For example, a king would have more power than the peasant in a feudal society, or a brahmin more power than a member of the untouchables in Indian caste society. Power, in this case, is the ability to control those of lower social status and to influence their life. What is important to note here is that every individual is assigned to one of these roles, that they understand their role and that they are assigned to it, and that there is no meaningful biological difference between those of separate roles. A king is separated from the peasant simply by the role of their parents in society, not because of some biological imperative that forces them to become king or peasant.

What I have put above are examples of direct or formal hierarchy. They are institutionalized in the legal code and recognized rigidly in a society. But, we also have more hidden forms of hierarchies, where the power relationship is not as clear as a king and peasant, where one can strictly tell the other what to do. These are called 'indirect' hierarchies. One such example of this is the power difference between races in post-civil rights era America. While, legally, Black people have the same rights as white people in America, there are huge power imbalances between them. Black Americans make up a much larger section of the prison population than white Americans, they are more likely to be sentenced to prison for crimes they did not commit, they face discrimination in the job market and underrepresentation in STEM fields, and so on. While white people cannot directly go around commanding black people, like a king does to a peasant, they still have comparatively more power in society, from being able to find jobs easier, to generally having larger incomes, etc. This is the imbalance of power in society, where one group has much more power to do things, rather than power over others. Again, these roles are assigned by society, regardless of a biological imperative to fit into the roles. Black people do not have a biological imperative to put themselves into a lower status than whites, despite the hierarchy being based on skin color. These are also institutionalized, like the king and peasant, as they are cultural phenomena perpetuated by society itself. Racist attitudes would cease to exist if not enforced by society. Harari says, in his description of human hierarchies, “Yet… these hierarchies are all the product of human imagination. Brahmins and Shudras were not really created by the gods from different body parts of a primeval being. Instead, the distinction between the two castes was created by laws and norms invented by humans… Contrary to Aristotle, there is no biological difference between slaves and free people” (Harari 136). We can point out many of these in

society, the hierarchy of rich and poor, man and woman, etc. Now that hierarchy is defined, now we can discuss how the “hierarchies” in nature are not truly hierarchies at all.

The modern idea of hierarchies in nature stems from Darwin’s theory of evolution and the survival of the fittest mantra that many narrowly apply to his theory. Proponents of survival of the fittest took Darwin’s theories of natural selection to mean that nature is a constant and perpetual state of war between organisms; a constant fight for survival where only those with the strongest genetic material survive and the strongest rule. Those that are the strongest, survive and pass on their genetic material, which then becomes selected for over time. From this, they apply human concepts of domination, hierarchy, and subjugation to nature, concluding that the natural state of man should be that of hierarchies and domination. I will agree that a fight for survival is present in nature and in evolution, but in their examination of the fight for survival, they miss an equally important part of evolution: the idea of mutual aid. Kropotkin says, “There is an immense amount of warfare and extermination going on… there is, at the same time, as much, or perhaps even more, of mutual support, mutual aid, and mutual defence amidst animals belonging to the same species or, at least, to the same society” (Kropotkin 14). Kropotkin observed in the harsh tundra of Siberia, that species that worked together for the betterment of their community fared equally well, if not better than species that warred with each other continuously. He used the example of ants to indicate this clearly. An individual ant does not have the same defensive features that many other insects have; its venom is weak, it lacks camouflage, and it’s exoskeleton is not extremely strong. Yet he notes that, “the ants, in their thousands are not much destroyed by the birds, not even by the anteaters… When Forel emptied a bagful of ants in a meadow he saw that ‘the crickets ran away, abandoning their holes… the grasshoppers fled in all directions; the spiders and the beetles abandoned their prey…” (Kropotkin 19). When united, the ants are powerful in ways that, if they were disunited and fighting each other for survival, they could not even imagine. Recent studies have also noted that, among ant communities 40% of the ants are not actively doing any kind of labor for the colony, because there is simply no need for the labor of the ants at the time. Yet, there is no stigma applied to these 'lazy' ants by the 'productive' ants. They are treated the exact same within the community. As soon as the 'productive' ants are removed, the 'lazy' ants step up and replace the lost labor, as necessary (Charbonneau 22). If they had a community solely based on mutual struggle and competition, the 'lazy' ants would not exist, but instead they have a community based off mutual aid and protection. Kropotkin observed this in many insect communities, mammalian communities, and avian communities, as well as

interspecies mutual aid and symbiotic evolution. There are dozens of examples that could be rattled off on top of this, but instead I will ask one final question: Which community would be considered best, one that is based off constant competition and struggle, where most individuals are starved by the most fit, or one that is based off mutual aid and defense, where every member of society is cared for by the other members? I would say the latter is more suited to handle natural disasters, famines, and threats by other species, than the former. This proves that nature is more than mutual struggle and competition and that humans are not bound to this fate by any kind of natural compulsion.

There are yet more problems with the observations of 'hierarchies' in animal communities. Many of the hierarchies that people seemingly observe in nature are a result of crudely applying human political institutions to animal actions. Bookchin says, “A snarling animal is neither ‘vicious’ nor ‘savage,’ nor does it ‘misbehave’ or ‘earn’ punishment because it reacts appropriately to certain stimuli. By making such anthropomorphic judgements about natural phenomena, we deny the integrity of nature” (Bookchin 93). By this, he means that we apply human terms to nonhumans so that we can necessitate human order and meaning in the actions of animals, thereby justifying our own hierarchies. Many of the hierarchies that they point out in nature fail to meet the criteria established for considering something a hierarchy. A “queen” ant is not a queen through ant’s social nature and establishment of hierarchies, it is a biological imperative that forces her, rigidly, into the position of “queen” -- a term that human beings have ascribed to her. The worker ants do not understand their roles as “worker” instead they just simply, through biological impulses, do the tasks required of them. They are too rigidly imposed by instinct to be considered hierarchy (Bookchin 94).

On the other hand, we have animals where the supposed “hierarchies” are too wishy-washy. Chimpanzee communities have “hierarchies” that are more similar to just individual interactions because of their temporary nature, “Chimpanzees… forms such fluid kinds of stratification and establish such unstable types of association that the word hierarchy becomes and obstacle to understanding their behavioral characteristics” (Bookchin 93). They lack the “roles” that a hierarchical society requires. The “beta” questioning the “alpha’s” authority in chimpanzee society does not threaten to jeopardize the authority of the role of the alpha, instead it is just an affront to the individual. If the peasant questions the authority of the king, that is an affront to the role of the king. Considering all of this, calling these relationships between animals “hierarchies” is anthropocentric, dangerous to the studying of animal behavior, and simply scientifically incorrect.

Now, let us discuss the emergence of hierarchy in humans. The earliest humans existed in what is called an “organic society”. This is a society that lacks economics classes, a political state, and contains an egalitarian mindset both within the community and with regards to the world around them (Bookchin 110). Egalitarianism is implicit in the worldview of organic societies and needs not to be specified in societies where notions of inequality do not exist (Bookchin 111). Bookchin talks about the absence of any type of domineering or coercive language in the language of the Wintu Indians, “A Wintu mother, for example, does not take a baby into the shade; she goes with it. A chief does not “rule” his people, he stands with them. ‘They never say, and in fact they cannot say, as we do, ‘I have a sister’, or a ‘son’, or ‘husband,’…” (Bookchin 111). There is a unity of the individual and the community, a unity in the diversity and independence of each person in the society, “there is a point in the development in organic society where it visibly generates a sense of symbiosis, of communal interdependence and cooperation… The organic community is conceived to be part of the balance of nature” (Bookchin 112). Leadership in these societies do not have the same “power” that we see in leaders in our societies. It is not codified or political in any manner, instead it is just simply for the functional purpose of organizing hunts or war expeditions (Bookchin 122). It is not institutionalized, it does not establish the role of “leader”, and it is not coercive in any way. In summary, their societies are completely equal in every way, with no domination of man over woman, parent over child, worker over nonworker, etc. No form of informal or formal hierarchies exist in organic societies and this shows that it is not inherent to human societies.

The first hierarchies stemmed from the division of labor between men and women, the experience and prestige that comes from age, and the lineages that people descended from. These were not organized hierarchically in early organic societies, such as those I stated above, but it slowly materialized into the hierarchy between men and women, old and young, and the great lineages that would later become rulers.

The division of labor between men and women became one of necessity. Women in preliterate societies lacked the mobility that men had, because of nature of human development. Children are attached to their mothers for long periods of their development and one can scarcely hunt or effectively forage outside of the village with a screaming infant in their arms. Hence, women were relegated to home activities, ones of gathering, crafting, and generally managing the household, while men were tasked with hunting, foraging, and defense. Because males were trained from birth to be hunters and with more physically demanding tasks, they were natural fits for war and raiding, which would become gradually more and

more common as human societies. This put them in key positions that would later become the leaders and rulers, those of tribal commanders, tribal chieftains, and councilmembers, due to their leadership experience. Women are also much more valuable for the future prosperity of the village. War and hunting are deadly activities and villages cannot afford to lose their women at the same rate they lose men. Then, the old come into power through their situation as knowledge-keepers. They socialize and teach the youth, which gives them prestige in the village, while at the same time their experience nets them high positions in the aforementioned leadership positions (Bookchin 152).

These are not institutionalized hierarchies, but from these the institutionalized hierarchies form. It is not easy to delineate an exact point where this happens, it is a slow process that regressed at times, but the march was one towards hierarchical societies. This is the start of the “class society”. Shamans became more and more important in society, many of whom were the respected elders of the society. Their positions were tenuous, based off of the success of his techniques and how the village is faring at the time. In order to secure their power, they played political games, established alliances, and created “power centers” (Bookchin 154). They would change the religious views of the society to offer them more stability and power, eventually cementing themselves into priestly elite, even projecting their domination into religious ceremonies, “By converting mundane nature spirits and demons into humanlike supernatural deities and devils, the priestly corporation had cunningly created a radically new social and ideological dispensation, indeed, a new way of mentalizing rule” (Bookchin 162). They took these lands as permanent spoils of war, or in the case of theocratic society, land was seen as being owned by the gods the shamans worshipped to, leading to the replacement of communal ownership of land to land being owned by deities, and by extension, the shamans. Advancements in technology provided the means to support the new rise of professional priests, warriors, professional bureaucrats, and later the massive states we see later in history. But, without the integration of classes and exploitation in the private life of the individual, the rise of the hierarchy would not have been possible (Bookchin 167). This is shown by American Indian societies, where they were capable of vast technological feats, yet there was no development of the hierarchical systems to the extent that we saw in Europe or the Middle East at similar points in technological development.

In this process, the rise of the city and more changes in religious attitudes towards nature began. Bookchin wrote “For it was the city that provided the territory for territorialism, the civic institutions for citizenship, the marketplace for elaborate forms of exchange, the exclusivity of quarters and neighborhoods for

classes, and monumental structures for the state” (Bookchin 167). The economic necessity of the city for the advancement of the class system leads to further separation from the environment, less community kinship, and less unity with all those around. The individual no longer sees themselves as a member of the community, one that includes nature around them, instead they see themselves as separate from it and isolated from it,

In rendering the individual bear subject to manipulative forms of human predation, generalization in this form marks the first steps towards objectification of the external world… If the individual bear is merely an epiphenomenon of an animal spirit, it is now possible to objectify nature by completely subsuming the particular by the general and denying the uniqueness of the specific and concrete. (Bookchin 171) Here, he is talking about the development of reason, generalization and classification that transformed the human mindset towards nature. No longer is the spirit embodied in the particular, but now it is abstracted into the absolute. The corn is no longer just corn, instead it is a blessing from the food deity. This abstraction is the application of the loss of communal ship in human relationships and the human dominance systems into the environment. Now, the bear is something to be conquered and taken, not something that exists in and of itself in nature. We can contrast the animism of organic societies with the later development of the Hebrew bible. The Hebrew bible marks the reverse of the transformation we saw early, where the particular becomes the absolute, in that now, the absolute creates the particular. In the Hebrew Bible, God gifted humanity their landed, presupposing humanity’s existence on the existence of God, which is the abstract (Bookchin 175). The evolution of animism supposes that the universal comes from the particular, while the Judeo-Christian tradition supposes that the particular exists as a byproduct of the universal and depends on it for its existence. The domination we saw rising in pre-literate societies was outsourced into the religious tradition, where humanity’s existence is predicated on God’s existence, and by extension, God’s control of humanity (Bookchin 177). From these changes in culture, the domination of nature was justified by the domination of human by human.

These systems evolved over time, especially in the West, where the JudeoChristian spirit took over as the dominating mindset. Humans, with the domineering mindset grown from the changes above, have systematically destroyed nature around us to provide for those in the upper ranks of hierarchy and to fuel our own intense consumption. Capitalism has led to the depletion of Earth’s natural resources at an unprecedented rate, leading to an accumulation of wealth at the top of the social hierarchy. Reclus remarked on the changes in air quality at the start of

industrialization, “it is a well-known fact that in the cities the air is full of deadly substances… it is nonetheless certain that in all the countries of Europe and America, the average life-span among rural populations exceeds that of the city dwellers by several years” (Reclus 8). Capitalism is truly the ultimate form of the objectification of humans, and by extent, nature, that we saw before. It turned the labor of humans into a commodity, an object to be sold and bartered for, and by extension, made humanity see nature as a commodity to be exploited, dominated, and sold for profit. Our society, not coincidentally, is now more stratified than ever. The divide between rich and poor is magnificently large and with that, the wants of the rich are ever increasing. The needs of the modern-day upper classes are far more than the needs of previous generations of upper classes, leading to a necessity for more domination of nature,

Just as capitalism leads to production for the sake of production, so too it leads to consumption for the sake of consumption. The bourgeois maxim,

‘grow or die,’ has its counterpart in ‘buy or die.’ And just as the production of commodities is no longer related to their function as use-values, as objects of real utility, so wants are no longer related to humanity’s sense of its real needs. (Bookchin 136) Capitalism is the ultimate form of hierarchical domination, where Nature needs to be destroyed to keep the system afloat and functioning, completely absent of any relation to the needs of humans. How many gallons of milk are poured down the drain by farmers, because the sale of them would lower the price of milk, causing their profits to crash? Or how many products are thrown away at the back of grocery stores, because giving them to homeless shelters isn’t profitable? The exploitation of nature is not causing capitalism, capitalism, and the hierarchy associated with it, is causing the exploitation of nature and mass waste that we have today.

In summary, the domination of humans, coming from the ancient pre-literate humans, leads to the domination of nature, because of the ever-expanding needs and wants of the upper classes, as well as shifts in mindset to keep hierarchical systems in power. The political system that currently exists, one based off of hierarchy is extremely flawed and leads to many of the environmental dangers and issues that we see today, such as pollution, life-threatening climate change, and ocean acidification, which threatens our marine life. All of these issues stem from the hierarchies that we see in modern society. Reformation of the economic system of capitalism, while not addressing the domineering mindset that humanity has towards nature does nothing to solve these issues. Our future would benefit

extremely from the toppling of human hierarchies and the change in domineering type attitudes towards nature.

Works Cited

Bookchin, M. (2005). The Ecology of freedom: The emergence and dissolution of hierarchy. Oakland, CA: AK

Press.

Charbonneau, D., Sasaki, T., & Dornhaus, A. (2017). Who needs ‘lazy’ workers? Inactive workers act as a

‘reserve’ labor force replacing active workers, but inactive workers are not replaced when they are

removed. Plos One, 12(9). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0184074

Harari, Y. N. (2020). Sapiens. Lieu de publication non-identifié: Michel Albin.

Kropotkin, Petr Alekseevich, and Paul Avrich. (1972). The Conquest of Bread. New York: New York University

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Kropotkin, Peter. Mutual Aid a Factor in Evolution. Middletown (Estados Unidos): Hampshine, 2016.

MacDougall, R. D. (2009). Mutual aid. Concord, NH: Plaidswede Publishing.

Marshall, P. H. (2012). Demanding the impossible?: A history of anarchism. London: Harper Perennial.

Reclus, E., Clark, J., & Martin, C. (2004). Anarchy, geography, modernity: The radical social thought of

EliséeReclus.

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